<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER VI — JIMMY ABANDONS PICCADILLY </h2>
<p>Jimmy removed himself sorrowfully from the doorstep of the Duke of
Devizes' house in Cleveland Row. His mission had been a failure. In answer
to his request to be permitted to see Lord Percy Whipple, the butler had
replied that Lord Percy was confined to his bed and was seeing nobody. He
eyed Jimmy, on receiving his name, with an interest which he failed to
conceal, for he too, like Bayliss, had read and heartily enjoyed Bill
Blake's spirited version of the affair of last night which had appeared in
the <i>Daily Sun</i>. Indeed, he had clipped the report out and had been
engaged in pasting it in an album when the bell rang.</p>
<p>In face of this repulse, Jimmy's campaign broke down. He was at a loss to
know what to do next. He ebbed away from the Duke's front door like an
army that has made an unsuccessful frontal attack on an impregnable
fortress. He could hardly force his way in and search for Lord Percy.</p>
<p>He walked along Pall Mall, deep in thought. It was a beautiful day. The
rain which had fallen in the night and relieved Mr. Crocker from the
necessity of watching cricket had freshened London up.</p>
<p>The sun was shining now from a turquoise sky. A gentle breeze blew from
the south. Jimmy made his way into Piccadilly, and found that thoroughfare
a-roar with happy automobilists and cheery pedestrians. Their gaiety
irritated him. He resented their apparent enjoyment of life.</p>
<p>Jimmy's was not a nature that lent itself readily to introspection, but he
was putting himself now through a searching self-examination which was
revealing all kinds of unsuspected flaws in his character. He had been
having too good a time for years past to have leisure to realise that he
possessed any responsibilities. He had lived each day as it came in the
spirit of the Monks of Thelema. But his father's reception of the news of
last night's escapade and the few words he had said had given him pause.
Life had taken on of a sudden a less simple aspect. Dimly, for he was not
accustomed to thinking along these lines, he perceived the numbing truth
that we human beings are merely as many pieces in a jig-saw puzzle and
that our every movement affects the fortunes of some other piece. Just so,
faintly at first and taking shape by degrees, must the germ of civic
spirit have come to Prehistoric Man. We are all individualists till we
wake up.</p>
<p>The thought of having done anything to make his father unhappy was bitter
to Jimmy Crocker. They had always been more like brothers than father and
son. Hard thoughts about himself surged through Jimmy's mind. With a
dejectedness to which it is possible that his headache contributed he put
the matter squarely to himself. His father was longing to return to
America—he, Jimmy, by his idiotic behaviour was putting obstacles in
the way of that return—what was the answer? The answer, to Jimmy's
way of thinking, was that all was not well with James Crocker, that, when
all the evidence was weighed, James Crocker would appear to be a fool, a
worm, a selfish waster, and a hopeless, low-down skunk.</p>
<p>Having come to this conclusion, Jimmy found himself so low in spirit that
the cheerful bustle of Piccadilly was too much for him. He turned, and
began to retrace his steps. Arriving in due course at the top of the
Haymarket he hesitated, then turned down it till he reached Cockspur
Street. Here the Trans-Atlantic steamship companies have their offices,
and so it came about that Jimmy, chancing to look up as he walked,
perceived before him, riding gallantly on a cardboard ocean behind a
plate-glass window, the model of a noble vessel. He stopped, conscious of
a curious thrill. There is a superstition in all of us. When an accidental
happening chances to fit smoothly in with a mood, seeming to come as a
direct commentary on that mood, we are apt to accept it in defiance of our
pure reason as an omen. Jimmy strode to the window and inspected the model
narrowly. The sight of it had started a new train of thought. His heart
began to race. Hypnotic influences were at work on him.</p>
<p>Why not? Could there be a simpler solution of the whole trouble?</p>
<p>Inside the office he would see a man with whiskers buying a ticket for New
York. The simplicity of the process fascinated him. All you had to do was
to walk in, bend over the counter while the clerk behind it made dabs with
a pencil at the illustrated plate of the ship's interior organs, and hand
over your money. A child could do it, if in funds. At this thought his
hand strayed to his trouser-pocket. A musical crackling of bank-notes
proceeded from the depths. His quarterly allowance had been paid to him
only a short while before, and, though a willing spender, he still
retained a goodly portion of it. He rustled the notes again. There was
enough in that pocket to buy three tickets to New York. Should he? . . .
Or, on the other hand—always look on both sides of the question—should
he not?</p>
<p>It would certainly seem to be the best thing for all parties if he did
follow the impulse. By remaining in London he was injuring everybody,
himself included. . . . Well, there was no harm in making enquiries.
Probably the boat was full up anyway. . . . He walked into the office.</p>
<p>"Have you anything left on the <i>Atlantic</i> this trip?"</p>
<p>The clerk behind the counter was quite the wrong sort of person for Jimmy
to have had dealings with in his present mood. What Jimmy needed was a
grave, sensible man who would have laid a hand on his shoulder and said
"Do nothing rash, my boy!" The clerk fell short of this ideal in
practically every particular. He was about twenty-two, and he seemed
perfectly enthusiastic about the idea of Jimmy going to America. He beamed
at Jimmy.</p>
<p>"Plenty of room," he said. "Very few people crossing. Give you excellent
accommodation."</p>
<p>"When does the boat sail?"</p>
<p>"Eight to-morrow morning from Liverpool. Boat-train leaves Paddington six
to-night."</p>
<p>Prudence came at the eleventh hour to check Jimmy. This was not a matter,
he perceived, to be decided recklessly, on the spur of a sudden impulse.
Above all, it was not a matter to be decided before lunch. An empty
stomach breeds imagination. He had ascertained that he could sail on the
<i>Atlantic</i> if he wished to. The sensible thing to do now was to go
and lunch and see how he felt about it after that. He thanked the clerk,
and started to walk up the Haymarket, feeling hard-headed and practical,
yet with a strong premonition that he was going to make a fool of himself
just the same.</p>
<p>It was half-way up the Haymarket that he first became conscious of the
girl with the red hair.</p>
<p>Plunged in thought, he had not noticed her before. And yet she had been
walking a few paces in front of him most of the way. She had come out of
Panton Street, walking briskly, as one going to keep a pleasant
appointment. She carried herself admirably, with a jaunty swing.</p>
<p>Having become conscious of this girl, Jimmy, ever a warm admirer of the
sex, began to feel a certain interest stealing over him. With interest
came speculation. He wondered who she was. He wondered where she had
bought that excellently fitting suit of tailor-made grey. He admired her
back, and wondered whether her face, if seen, would prove a
disappointment. Thus musing, he drew near to the top of the Haymarket,
where it ceases to be a street and becomes a whirlpool of rushing traffic.
And here the girl, having paused and looked over her shoulder, stepped off
the sidewalk. As she did so a taxi-cab rounded the corner quickly from the
direction of Coventry Street.</p>
<p>The agreeable surprise of finding the girl's face fully as attractive as
her back had stimulated Jimmy, so that he was keyed up for the exhibition
of swift presence-of-mind. He jumped forward and caught her arm, and swung
her to one side as the cab rattled past, its driver thinking hard thoughts
to himself. The whole episode was an affair of seconds.</p>
<p>"Thank you," said the girl.</p>
<p>She rubbed the arm which he had seized with rather a rueful expression.
She was a little white, and her breath came quickly.</p>
<p>"I hope I didn't hurt you," said Jimmy.</p>
<p>"You did. Very much. But the taxi would have hurt me more."</p>
<p>She laughed. She looked very attractive when she laughed. She had a small,
piquant, vivacious face. Jimmy, as he looked at it, had an odd feeling
that he had seen her before—when and where he did not know. That
mass of red-gold hair seemed curiously familiar. Somewhere in the
hinterland of his mind there lurked a memory, but he could not bring it
into the open. As for the girl, if she had ever met him before, she showed
no signs of recollecting it. Jimmy decided that, if he had seen her, it
must have been in his reporter days. She was plainly an American, and he
occasionally had the feeling that he had seen every one in America when he
had worked for the <i>Chronicle</i>.</p>
<p>"That's right," he said approvingly. "Always look on the bright side."</p>
<p>"I only arrived in London yesterday," said the girl, "and I haven't got
used to your keeping-to-the-left rules. I don't suppose I shall ever get
back to New York alive. Perhaps, as you have saved my life, you wouldn't
mind doing me another service. Can you tell me which is the nearest and
safest way to a restaurant called the Regent Grill?"</p>
<p>"It's just over there, at the corner of Regent Street. As to the safest
way, if I were you I should cross over at the top of the street there and
then work round westward. Otherwise you will have to cross Piccadilly
Circus."</p>
<p>"I absolutely refuse even to try to cross Piccadilly Circus. Thank you
very much. I will follow your advice. I hope I shall get there. It doesn't
seem at all likely."</p>
<p>She gave him a little nod, and moved away. Jimmy turned into that
drug-store at the top of the Haymarket at which so many Londoners have
found healing and comfort on the morning after, and bought the pink drink
for which his system had been craving since he rose from bed. He wondered
why, as he drained it, he should feel ashamed and guilty.</p>
<p>A few minutes later he found himself, with mild surprise, going down the
steps of the Regent Grill. It was the last place he had had in his mind
when he had left the steamship company's offices in quest of lunch. He had
intended to seek out some quiet, restful nook where he could be alone with
his thoughts. If anybody had told him then that five minutes later he
would be placing himself of his own free will within the range of a
restaurant orchestra playing "My Little Grey Home in the West"—and
the orchestra at the Regent played little else—he would not have
believed him.</p>
<p>Restaurants in all large cities have their ups and downs. At this time the
Regent Grill was enjoying one of those bursts of popularity for which
restaurateurs pray to whatever strange gods they worship. The more
prosperous section of London's Bohemia flocked to it daily. When Jimmy had
deposited his hat with the robber-band who had their cave just inside the
main entrance and had entered the grill-room, he found it congested. There
did not appear to be a single unoccupied table.</p>
<p>From where he stood he could see the girl of the red-gold hair. Her back
was towards him, and she was sitting at a table against one of the pillars
with a little man with eye-glasses, a handsome woman in the forties, and a
small stout boy who was skirmishing with the olives. As Jimmy hesitated,
the vigilant head-waiter, who knew him well, perceived him, and hurried
up.</p>
<p>"In one moment, Mister Crockaire!" he said, and began to scatter commands
among the underlings. "I will place a table for you in the aisle."</p>
<p>"Next to that pillar, please," said Jimmy.</p>
<p>The underlings had produced a small table—apparently from up their
sleeves, and were draping it in a cloth. Jimmy sat down and gave his
order. Ordering was going on at the other table. The little man seemed
depressed at the discovery that corn on the cob and soft-shelled crabs
were not to be obtained, and his wife's reception of the news that clams
were not included in the Regent's bill-of-fare was so indignant that one
would have said that she regarded the fact as evidence that Great Britain
was going to pieces and would shortly lose her place as a world power.</p>
<p>A selection having finally been agreed upon, the orchestra struck up "My
Little Grey Home in the West," and no attempt was made to compete with it.
When the last lingering strains had died away and the violinist-leader,
having straightened out the kinks in his person which the rendition of the
melody never failed to produce, had bowed for the last time, a clear,
musical voice spoke from the other side of the pillar.</p>
<p>"Jimmy Crocker is a WORM!"</p>
<p>Jimmy spilled his cocktail. It might have been the voice of Conscience.</p>
<p>"I despise him more than any one on earth. I hate to think that he's an
American."</p>
<p>Jimmy drank the few drops that remained in his glass, partly to make sure
of them, partly as a restorative. It is an unnerving thing to be despised
by a red-haired girl whose life you have just saved. To Jimmy it was not
only unnerving; it was uncanny. This girl had not known him when they met
on the street a few moments before. How then was she able to display such
intimate acquaintance with his character now as to describe him—justly
enough—as a worm? Mingled with the mystery of the thing was its
pathos. The thought that a girl could be as pretty as this one and yet
dislike him so much was one of the saddest things Jimmy had ever come
across. It was like one of those Things Which Make Me Weep In This Great
City so dear to the hearts of the sob-writers of his late newspaper.</p>
<p>A waiter bustled up with a high-ball. Jimmy thanked him with his eyes. He
needed it. He raised it to his lips.</p>
<p>"He's always drinking—"</p>
<p>He set it down hurriedly.</p>
<p>"—and making a disgraceful exhibition of himself in public! I always
think Jimmy Crocker—"</p>
<p>Jimmy began to wish that somebody would stop this girl. Why couldn't the
little man change the subject to the weather, or that stout child start
prattling about some general topic? Surely a boy of that age, newly
arrived in London, must have all sorts of things to prattle about? But the
little man was dealing strenuously with a breaded cutlet, while the stout
boy, grimly silent, surrounded fish-pie in the forthright manner of a
starving python. As for the elder woman, she seemed to be wrestling with
unpleasant thoughts, beyond speech.</p>
<p>"—I always think that Jimmy Crocker is the worst case I know of the
kind of American young man who spends all his time in Europe and tries to
become an imitation Englishman. Most of them are the sort any country
would be glad to get rid of, but he used to work once, so you can't excuse
him on the ground that he hasn't the sense to know what he's doing. He's
deliberately chosen to loaf about London and make a pest of himself. He
went to pieces with his eyes open. He's a perfect, utter, hopeless WORM!"</p>
<p>Jimmy had never been very fond of the orchestra at the Regent Grill,
holding the view that it interfered with conversation and made for an
unhygienic rapidity of mastication; but he was profoundly grateful to it
now for bursting suddenly into <i>La Boheme</i>, the loudest item in its
repertory. Under cover of that protective din he was able to toy with a
steaming dish which his waiter had brought. Probably that girl was saying
all sorts of things about him still but he could not hear them.</p>
<p>The music died away. For a moment the tortured air quivered in comparative
silence; then the girl's voice spoke again. She had, however, selected
another topic of conversation.</p>
<p>"I've seen all I want to of England," she said, "I've seen Westminster
Abbey and the Houses of Parliament and His Majesty's Theatre and the Savoy
and the Cheshire Cheese, and I've developed a frightful home-sickness. Why
shouldn't we go back to-morrow?"</p>
<p>For the first time in the proceedings the elder woman spoke. She cast
aside her mantle of gloom long enough to say "Yes," then wrapped it round
her again. The little man, who had apparently been waiting for her vote
before giving his own, said that the sooner he was on board a New
York-bound boat the better he would be pleased. The stout boy said
nothing. He had finished his fish-pie, and was now attacking jam roll with
a sort of morose resolution.</p>
<p>"There's certain to be a boat," said the girl. "There always is. You've
got to say that for England—it's an easy place to get back to
America from." She paused. "What I can't understand is how, after having
been in America and knowing what it was like, Jimmy Crocker could stand
living . . ."</p>
<p>The waiter had come to Jimmy's side, bearing cheese; but Jimmy looked at
it with dislike and shook his head in silent negation. He was about to
depart from this place. His capacity for absorbing home-truths about
himself was exhausted. He placed a noiseless sovereign on the table,
caught the waiter's eye, registered renunciation, and departed soft-footed
down the aisle. The waiter, a man who had never been able to bring himself
to believe in miracles, revised the views of a life-time. He looked at the
sovereign, then at Jimmy, then at the sovereign again. Then he took up the
coin and bit it furtively.</p>
<p>A few minutes later, a hat-check boy, untipped for the first time in his
predatory career, was staring at Jimmy with equal intensity, but with far
different feelings. Speechless concern was limned on his young face.</p>
<p>The commissionaire at the Piccadilly entrance of the restaurant touched
his hat ingratiatingly, with the smug confidence of a man who is
accustomed to getting sixpence a time for doing it.</p>
<p>"Taxi, Mr. Crocker?"</p>
<p>"A worm," said Jimmy.</p>
<p>"Beg pardon, sir?"</p>
<p>"Always drinking," explained Jimmy, "and making a pest of himself."</p>
<p>He passed on. The commissionaire stared after him as intently as the
waiter and the hat-check boy. He had sometimes known Mr. Crocker like this
after supper, but never before during the luncheon hour.</p>
<p>Jimmy made his way to his club in Northumberland Avenue. For perhaps half
an hour he sat in a condition of coma in the smoking-room; then, his mind
made up, he went to one of the writing-tables. He sat awaiting inspiration
for some minutes, then began to write.</p>
<p>The letter he wrote was to his father:</p>
<p>Dear Dad:</p>
<p>I have been thinking over what we talked about this morning, and it seems
to me the best thing I can do is to drop out of sight for a brief space.
If I stay on in London, I am likely at any moment to pull some boner like
last night's which will spill the beans for you once more. The least I can
do for you is to give you a clear field and not interfere, so I am off to
New York by to-night's boat.</p>
<p>I went round to Percy's to try to grovel in the dust before him, but he
wouldn't see me. It's no good grovelling in the dust of the front steps
for the benefit of a man who's in bed on the second floor, so I withdrew
in more or less good order. I then got the present idea. Mark how all
things work together for good. When they come to you and say "No title for
you. Your son slugged our pal Percy," all you have to do is to come back
at them with "I know my son slugged Percy, and believe me I didn't do a
thing to him! I packed him off to America within twenty-four hours. Get me
right, boys! I'm anti-Jimmy and pro-Percy." To which their reply will be
"Oh, well, in that case arise, Lord Crocker!" or whatever they say when
slipping a title to a deserving guy. So you will see that by making this
getaway I am doing the best I can to put things straight. I shall give
this to Bayliss to give to you. I am going to call him up on the phone in
a minute to have him pack a few simple tooth-brushes and so on for me. On
landing in New York, I shall instantly proceed to the Polo Grounds to
watch a game of Rounders, and will cable you the full score. Well. I think
that's about all. So good-bye—or even farewell—for the
present.</p>
<h3> J. </h3>
<p>P.S. I know you'll understand, dad. I'm doing what seems to me the only
possible thing. Don't worry about me. I shall be all right. I'll get back
my old job and be a terrific success all round. You go ahead and get that
title and then meet me at the entrance of the Polo Grounds. I'll be
looking for you.</p>
<p>P.P.S. I'm a worm.</p>
<p>The young clerk at the steamship offices appeared rejoiced to see Jimmy
once more. With a sunny smile he snatched a pencil from his ear and
plunged it into the vitals of the Atlantic.</p>
<p>"How about E. a hundred and eight?"</p>
<p>"Suits me."</p>
<p>"You're too late to go in the passenger-list, of course."</p>
<p>Jimmy did not reply. He was gazing rigidly at a girl who had just come in,
a girl with red hair and a friendly smile.</p>
<p>"So you're sailing on the <i>Atlantic</i>, too!" she said, with a glance
at the chart on the counter. "How odd! We have just decided to go back on
her too. There's nothing to keep us here and we're all homesick. Well, you
see I wasn't run over after I left you."</p>
<p>A delicious understanding relieved Jimmy's swimming brain, as thunder
relieves the tense and straining air. The feeling that he was going mad
left him, as the simple solution of his mystery came to him. This girl
must have heard of him in New York—perhaps she knew people whom he
knew and it was on hearsay, not on personal acquaintance, that she based
that dislike of him which she had expressed with such freedom and
conviction so short a while before at the Regent Grill. She did not know
who he was!</p>
<p>Into this soothing stream of thought cut the voice of the clerk.</p>
<p>"What name, please?"</p>
<p>Jimmy's mind rocked again. Why were these things happening to him to-day
of all days, when he needed the tenderest treatment, when he had a
headache already?</p>
<p>The clerk was eyeing him expectantly. He had laid down his pencil and was
holding aloft a pen. Jimmy gulped. Every name in the English language had
passed from his mind. And then from out of the dark came inspiration.</p>
<p>"Bayliss," he croaked.</p>
<p>The girl held out her hand.</p>
<p>"Then we can introduce ourselves at last. My name is Ann Chester. How do
you do, Mr. Bayliss?"</p>
<p>"How do you do, Miss Chester?"</p>
<p>The clerk had finished writing the ticket, and was pressing labels and a
pink paper on him. The paper, he gathered dully, was a form and had to be
filled up. He examined it, and found it to be a searching document. Some
of its questions could be answered off-hand, others required thought.</p>
<p>"Height?" Simple. Five foot eleven.</p>
<p>"Hair?" Simple. Brown.</p>
<p>"Eyes?" Simple again. Blue.</p>
<p>Next, queries of a more offensive kind.</p>
<p>"Are you a polygamist?"</p>
<p>He could answer that. Decidedly no. One wife would be ample—provided
she had red-gold hair, brown-gold eyes, the right kind of mouth, and a
dimple. Whatever doubts there might be in his mind on other points, on
that one he had none whatever.</p>
<p>"Have you ever been in prison?"</p>
<p>Not yet.</p>
<p>And then a very difficult one. "Are you a lunatic?"</p>
<p>Jimmy hesitated. The ink dried on his pen. He was wondering.</p>
<p>* * *<br/></p>
<p>In the dim cavern of Paddington Station the boat-train snorted
impatiently, varying the process with an occasional sharp shriek. The
hands of the station clock pointed to ten minutes to six. The platform was
a confused mass of travellers, porters, baggage, trucks, boys with buns
and fruits, boys with magazines, friends, relatives, and Bayliss the
butler, standing like a faithful watchdog beside a large suitcase. To the
human surf that broke and swirled about him he paid no attention. He was
looking for the young master.</p>
<p>Jimmy clove the crowd like a one-man flying-wedge. Two fruit and bun boys
who impeded his passage drifted away like leaves on an Autumn gale.</p>
<p>"Good man!" He possessed himself of the suitcase. "I was afraid you might
not be able to get here."</p>
<p>"The mistress is dining out, Mr. James. I was able to leave the house."</p>
<p>"Have you packed everything I shall want?"</p>
<p>"Within the scope of a suitcase, yes, sir."</p>
<p>"Splendid! Oh, by the way, give this letter to my father, will you?"</p>
<p>"Very good, sir."</p>
<p>"I'm glad you were able to manage. I thought your voice sounded doubtful
over the phone."</p>
<p>"I was a good deal taken aback, Mr. James. Your decision to leave was so
extremely sudden."</p>
<p>"So was Columbus'. You know about him? He saw an egg standing on its head
and whizzed off like a jack-rabbit."</p>
<p>"If you will pardon the liberty, Mr. James, is it not a little rash—?"</p>
<p>"Don't take the joy out of life, Bayliss. I may be a chump, but try to
forget it. Use your willpower."</p>
<p>"Good evening, Mr. Bayliss," said a voice behind them. They both turned.
The butler was gazing rather coyly at a vision in a grey tailor-made suit.</p>
<p>"Good evening, miss," he said doubtfully.</p>
<p>Ann looked at him in astonishment, then broke into a smile.</p>
<p>"How stupid of me! I meant this Mr. Bayliss. Your son! We met at the
steamship offices. And before that he saved my life. So we are old
friends."</p>
<p>Bayliss, gaping perplexedly and feeling unequal to the intellectual
pressure of the conversation, was surprised further to perceive a warning
scowl on the face of his Mr. James. Jimmy had not foreseen this thing, but
he had a quick mind and was equal to it.</p>
<p>"How are you, Miss Chester? My father has come down to see me off. This is
Miss Chester, dad."</p>
<p>A British butler is not easily robbed of his poise, but Bayliss was
frankly unequal to the sudden demand on his presence of mind. He lowered
his jaw an inch or two, but spoke no word.</p>
<p>"Dad's a little upset at my going," whispered Jimmy confidentially. "He's
not quite himself."</p>
<p>Ann was a girl possessed not only of ready tact but of a kind heart. She
had summed up Mr. Bayliss at a glance. Every line of him proclaimed him a
respectable upper servant. No girl on earth could have been freer than she
of snobbish prejudice, but she could not check a slight thrill of surprise
and disappointment at the discovery of Jimmy's humble origin. She
understood everything, and there were tears in her eyes as she turned away
to avoid intruding on the last moments of the parting of father and son.</p>
<p>"I'll see you on the boat, Mr. Bayliss," she said.</p>
<p>"Eh?" said Bayliss.</p>
<p>"Yes, yes," said Jimmy. "Good-bye till then."</p>
<p>Ann walked on to her compartment. She felt as if she had just read a whole
long novel, one of those chunky younger-English-novelist things. She knew
the whole story as well as if it had been told to her in detail. She could
see the father, the honest steady butler, living his life with but one
aim, to make a gentleman of his beloved only son. Year by year he had
saved. Probably he had sent the son to college. And now, with a father's
blessing and the remains of a father's savings, the boy was setting out
for the New World, where dollar-bills grew on trees and no one asked or
cared who any one else's father might be.</p>
<p>There was a lump in her throat. Bayliss would have been amazed if he could
have known what a figure of pathetic fineness he seemed to her. And then
her thoughts turned to Jimmy, and she was aware of a glow of kindliness
towards him. His father had succeeded in his life's ambition. He had
produced a gentleman! How easily and simply, without a trace of snobbish
shame, the young man had introduced his father. There was the right stuff
in him. He was not ashamed of the humble man who had given him his chance
in life. She found herself liking Jimmy amazingly . . .</p>
<p>The hands of the clock pointed to three minutes to the hour. Porters
skimmed to and fro like water-beetles.</p>
<p>"I can't explain," said Jimmy. "It wasn't temporary insanity; it was
necessity."</p>
<p>"Very good, Mr. James. I think you had better be taking your seat now."</p>
<p>"Quite right, I had. It would spoil the whole thing if they left me
behind. Bayliss, did you ever see such eyes? Such hair! Look after my
father while I am away. Don't let the dukes worry him. Oh, and, Bayliss"—Jimmy
drew his hand from his pocket—"as one pal to another—"</p>
<p>Bayliss looked at the crackling piece of paper.</p>
<p>"I couldn't, Mr. James, I really couldn't! A five-pound note! I couldn't!"</p>
<p>"Nonsense! Be a sport!"</p>
<p>"Begging your pardon, Mr. James, I really couldn't. You cannot afford to
throw away your money like this. You cannot have a great deal of it, if
you will excuse me for saying so."</p>
<p>"I won't do anything of the sort. Grab it! Oh, Lord, the train's starting!
Good-bye, Bayliss!"</p>
<p>The engine gave a final shriek of farewell. The train began to slide along
the platform, pursued to the last by optimistic boys offering buns for
sale. It gathered speed. Jimmy, leaning out the window, was amazed at a
spectacle so unusual as practically to amount to a modern miracle—the
spectacled Bayliss running. The butler was not in the pink of condition,
but he was striding out gallantly. He reached the door of Jimmy's
compartment, and raised his hand.</p>
<p>"Begging your pardon, Mr. James," he panted, "for taking the liberty, but
I really couldn't!"</p>
<p>He reached up and thrust something into Jimmy's hand, something crisp and
crackling. Then, his mission performed, fell back and stood waving a snowy
handkerchief. The train plunged into the tunnel.</p>
<p>Jimmy stared at the five-pound note. He was aware, like Ann farther along
the train, of a lump in his throat. He put the note slowly into his
pocket.</p>
<p>The train moved on.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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